Lakewood v. Thormyer

154 N.E.2d 777, 80 Ohio Law. Abs. 65, 10 Ohio Op. 2d 61, 1958 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 300
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1958
DocketNo. 703617
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 154 N.E.2d 777 (Lakewood v. Thormyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lakewood v. Thormyer, 154 N.E.2d 777, 80 Ohio Law. Abs. 65, 10 Ohio Op. 2d 61, 1958 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 300 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1958).

Opinion

OPINION

By HOOVER, J.

On the west side of Greater Cleveland the river of Rocky River cuts a deep gash into the earth as it flows northerly into Lake Erie. On its west bank is the city of Rocky River; on its east bank, the city of Lakewood. The river’s center line is the boundary between these two cities.

Not far south of the lake, a highway, known both as State Route No. 2 and as State Route, U. S. No. 6, roughly parallels the lake shore, running in an easterly-westerly direction and crossing the river’s chasm by a bridge.

In order to get across the river, the highway does sort of a multijointed contortion. Through much of Lakewood it proceeds westerly over either Lake Avenue or Clifton Boulevard in a fairly straight line until, as it approaches the river, it comes to a point at the west end of Clifton Boulevard. There it makes a left-angle turn onto West Clifton Boulevard, then a right turn onto Sloane Avenue which in turn makes an abrupt turn to the left and then a right angle turn onto the bridge. Once across the bridge, it makes a sharp turn to the right, passes under a railroad bridge, then makes an abrupt left turn on West Lake Road. In addition there are some lesser curves.

Going over this same bridge, is a third highway known as State Route U. S. No. 20. It courses westerly through Lakewood over the same streets as the other two routes including the tortuous turns leading to the bridge, but, on leaving the west end of the bridge, makes a left-angle turn and goes south on Wooster Road.

For simplicity, we use the name “Director” to designate either the Director or Acting Director of Highways of Ohio. The Director has proposed to eliminate this highway contortion by relocating part of the highway (which we sometimes call the “Director’s Proposal”) so as to make it run in practically a straight line from the end of Clifton Boulevard in Lakewood to West Lake Road in Rocky River and crossing the [69]*69river with a new bridge. This proposal, a limited access highway, cuts right through properties in a fine, Lakewood residential district — Clifton Park. Lakewood objects — hence this suit.

The Director claims the right to effectuate his proposal without Lakewood’s consent by virtue of power vested in him by §5521.01 R. C., which reads in part:

“The director may establish, construct, reconstruct, improve, widen, maintain, or repair any section of state highway within the limits of a city, including the elimination of railway grade crossings, and pay the entire or any part of the cost and expense thereof from state funds, but in all cases he shall first obtain the consent of the legislative authority of such municipal corporation.
“Provided, that when a federal aid primary highway or a federal aid interstate highway is located within a municipal corporation and, in the opinion of the director, is in urgent need of repair, reconstruction, widening, improvement, or relocation, so as to accommodate the traveling public, the director of highways shall submit a written request to the legislative authority of the municipality for its consent to the desired improvement. The legislative authority shall within sixty days after such written request has been received from the director either grant its consent to the improvement or refuse such consent by filing in writing with the director a statement of its reasons for refusing the consent and such alternate proposals as it deems reasonable. If the legislative authority fails to act or refuses consent, the director may upon consideration of the reasons for rejection make a resolution declaring the necessity of said improvement which shall be spread upon his journal and then proceed in the same manner as if consent had been given. A certified copy of said resolution shall be served upon the municipal legislative authority which may, within twenty days from the date of said service, appeal to the court of common pleas of the county in which such municipal corporation is situated, upon the reasonableness and necessity of the action provided for in the resolution. In the hearing upon appeal the director may introduce the record of his proceedings and such other competent evidence as he desires in support of his resolution, and the municipality may likewise introduce competent evidence opposing such resolution. The court may affirm or revoke said resolution. The decision of the common pleas court may be appealed to the court of appeals and the supreme court as in other cases. If the court affirms said resolution the director may proceed with said improvement with or without the co-operation of said municipality.”

For brevity, we shall refer to this statute as “the proviso.” This is' a question of first impression. The proviso has never been the subject of litigation. In fact, this is the first time the Director has taken action under it.

A physical mountain of contention has been heaped before the court — approximately 1000 pages of testimony, 225 pages of briefs, 75 different exhibits and 700 pages in the exhibits. Consequently we shall not discuss all the questions raised, but only some of the important ones. Many of the questions readily topple in the battle of briefs and need little or no treatment here.

[70]*70At the outset we have three procedural questions to decide. First, is the hearing in this court a trial de novo? The proviso does not specifically say one way or another. However, a study of its statutory history convinces us that this trial is now de novo for two reasons. Before its last amendment, the proviso did not provide for the introduction of new evidence in this trial, while now it does. Before that amendment, the proviso specifically provided that this should not be a trial de novo, in these words “Such appeal shall not be heard as a trial de novo.” (122 O. L. 416; it was once §1178-42 GO. That provision was deleted by the amendment. As is said in 37 O. Jur. (Statutes) 769, Sec. 439.

“* * *the presumption arises that the legislature intended some change in the effect and operation of the law by a substantial change ■ in the language of the statute.”

See 40 O. J. S. (Highways) 80, sec. 196.

The second procedural question is — which party has to proceed first and which party has the burden of proof? The statute does not specifically say which. The Director volunteered to proceed first and in his brief he acknowledged that he has the burden of proof. The court declares this the proper procedure. It is significant that the statute first mentions that the Director may introduce evidence, and then mentions that the municipality may do it. Because of the extraordinary nature of this procedure, this interpretation seems fairer.

The third procedural question is — is this controversy governed by The Ohio Administrative Procedure Act? We do not believe that it is. Sec. 119.01 (A) R. C.

Approaching the substantive questions, the first one is — has the Director brought himself within the provisions of the proviso so as to be entitled to proceed thereunder? We believe he has. An analysis of the proviso shows that there are seven essential steps to the bringing of this action, namely:

1. A federal aid primary highway or a federal aid interstate highway located within Lakewood must be involved.

2. The Director must determine that such a highway is in urgent need of repair, reconstruction, widening, improvement, or relocation, so as to accommodate the traveling public.

3.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Perrine v. Kennecott Mining Corp.
911 P.2d 1290 (Utah Supreme Court, 1996)
Public Service Commission v. Metro Taxicabs, Inc.
82 P.R. 967 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1961)
Comisión de Servicio Público v. Metro Taxicabs, Inc.
82 P.R. Dec. 999 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1961)
St. Clair County v. Town of Riverside
128 So. 2d 333 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 N.E.2d 777, 80 Ohio Law. Abs. 65, 10 Ohio Op. 2d 61, 1958 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakewood-v-thormyer-ohctcomplcuyaho-1958.